WHITE PAPER:
This informative paper discusses how you can roll out high-quality, video-enabled services faster with minimal risk and disruption so that your organization can achieve benefits similar to the incredible leaps that have been see within the healthcare industry.
WHITE PAPER:
This paper explains various topics like: MPEG-4 Wins the Battle of the Bandwidth, How to Succeed in Targeted Advertising, Changing Times for Video On Demand, Modular Uplink System and Making the Change to Switched Digital Video.
WHITE PAPER:
Why should your network be "Video-Ready"? Video applications have enabled enterprises to significantly increase worker productivity, improve collaboration, reduce costs, and streamline and optimize business operations. This paper dicusses the factors that will accelerate adoption of video solutions over the next few years.
WHITE PAPER:
With the first and only H.264 High Profile implementation for real-time video, customers can immediately begin saving on bandwidth costs—up to 50%! Read a technical overview of the H.264 High Profile standard, including the history of H.264 and the recent advancements to and benefits of the technology.
EGUIDE:
Setting up a video conference room in your office is about a little more than plugging in a camera and a screen. Download this expert guide for tips to design a video conference room, such as why you should say no to webcams.
WHITE PAPER:
In this white paper, readers will discover how they can take advantage of Web Technologies optimizations to provide a user experience befitting the truly mobile Web.
EGUIDE:
This expert E-Guide discusses the integration of video-conferencing into a unified communications strategy by introducing guidelines for establishing a video-conferencing action plan and weighing the pros and cons of various web conferencing options.
WHITE PAPER:
Recently, a study commissioned by Cisco® Systems made a prediction that added a new word to the lexicon of the network engineer and IT director: zetabyte. The study predicted that by 2013, two-thirds of a zetabyte of video traffic would be on corporate networks.